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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2178

Anxiety and Fear
The Digitalis anxiety can be so intense as to be agonising. It is somewhat vague in character, but very intense in degree, and it comes on in paroxysms. It may be connected with a depressed state of mind, fear of death, or fear of psychosis. A characteristic symptom is an anxiety of conscience, coupled with massive self- reproach (compare Cyclamen). ‘Internal anxiety, like pangs of conscience, as though he had committed a crime or as though he were about to be reproved’. ‘Anxiety as though he had committed something evil’.
Alternatively, the anxiety is directed towards the future rather than to the past, with evil foreboding and apprehensions. ‘Anxiety, with great dread of the future, worst every evening with sadness and weeping, which brings relief’. ‘Fearful apprehension of a sad character, with great depression, extremely aggravated by music’.
The severe feelings of anxiety are often coupled with great restlessness, also with nervous insomnia and a feeling ‘as if he should fly to pieces’, as Kent says. The anxieties are referred to the epigastrium, the region of stomach and heart, where they are almost physically felt as a fear of death. ‘Apprehensiveness that seems to come from the epigastrium’. ‘Every shock, like bad news, strikes in the epigastrium’.
A characteristic symptom from the proving is: ‘Weakness at stomach, like a sinking, as though life should become extinct’. Also: ‘Nausea with inclination to vomit, as if she would die… with extreme depression of mind and apprehensiveness’. Another form of manifestation is during the sleep, as frightening dreams of falling. ‘Frequent waking at night in fright, by dreams of falling from a height or into water’.